Obama leads latest Iowa poll

Presidential contenders rang in the 2008 election year with near-constant campaigning on Monday as a poll showed Democrat Barack Obama and Republican Mike Huckabee leading their rivals with three days remaining before the Iowa caucuses.

Anonymous phone calls and a negative campaign commercial that vanished into thin air also spiced the race, and not even New Year’s Eve was off-limits to campaign oratory.

The poll by the Des Moines Register showed Obama, an Illinois senator, with the support of 32 percent of those surveyed, compared to 25 percent for Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York and 24 percent for former Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina.

Among Republicans, Huckabee, a former Arkansas governor, had the backing of 32 percent of those surveyed, and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney had 26 percent.

Other polls have shown far closer races in recent days within both parties, and the leading candidates are engaged in a virtual nonstop round of personal appearances across the state that provides the first test of the race for the White House.

“I’m taking a risk, I know I am,” said Huckabee, who previewed an ad sharply critical of Romney during the day after first assuring reporters he would not air it on TV. Romney has aired ads critical of Huckabee in recent days.

The three top Democratic rivals campaigned in far more traditional fashion, and Obama, Edwards and Clinton combined for more than a dozen appearances before time ran out on 2007.

Obama jubilantly touted his lead in the Register poll during the last of five rallies, telling his audience that he had a six-point lead — and people in the crowd corrected him by noting it was actually a seven-point margin.

Clinton got the distinction for the last event of the year — in downtown Des Moines with her husband, the former president.

“We want our government back, we want our democracy back,” Edwards told an audience in Storm Lake. Locked in a three-way race, the former North Carolina senator claimed late momentum for a campaign built around his pledge to fight special interests in Washington.

Clinton, a former first lady bidding to become the first female president, seemed primed to counter. “I submit to you there isn’t anybody running who’s taken on more special interests and taken on more incoming fire and survived them than I have,” she told a crowd in Keokuk.

Obama stuck doggedly to the campaign pitch that has made him the most serious black presidential candidate in history. “You can’t afford to settle for the same old politics,” he told a crowd in Perry.

The poll said Obama was benefiting handsomely from an influx of first-time caucus-goers. If so, that meant his finish in the state would hinge to an extraordinary degree on the ability of his organization to turn out supporters.

In yet another sign of uncertainty, nearly a third of those polled said they could still change their minds.

In a gesture that reflected the hand-to-hand nature of the political struggle, his campaign arranged to have a former Clinton supporter, Marlin Eineke, introduce Obama to the crowd. The political convert said he was attracted to Obama’s positive campaign.

New Hampshire holds its first-in-the-nation primary five days after Iowa’s caucuses, and if history is a guide the roster of candidates will be far slimmer by then. Already, Democrats Chris Dodd and Joseph Biden have spoken about dropping out if they fail to meet their expectations in Iowa.

With three days remaining until the caucuses, several Democratic voters reported receiving anonymous telephone calls from self-proclaimed pollsters spreading unflattering information.

Some calls said Obama’s health plan would leave millions uninsured. Others said Edwards’ plans for a troop withdrawal from Iraq were dangerous or that Clinton would lead the party to defeat in the fall.

One Democrat, Michael Hancock of Coralville, said he had received an automated call reminding him that an important college football game would be televised Thursday night at the same time the caucuses were held.

He said he promptly hung up his phone before concluding it was a “transparent attempt to depress turnout from some people.” Neighboring Kansas plays in the Orange Bowl Thursday night.

No group has taken responsibility for any of the calls.

The newspaper poll reported virtually no change in Huckabee’s lead over Romney since a previous survey about a month ago.

Romney, the former Republican governor of Massachusetts, used his personal wealth to jump out to a sizable early lead in both Iowa and New Hampshire. Huckabee’s support among evangelical Christians allowed him to overtake Romney in surveys in recent weeks, although he has more lately fallen back under the weight of criticism of his record as governor of Arkansas as well as his own campaign missteps.

Stepping before more than a dozen television cameras, Huckabee first swore off negative ads in the Iowa race, then previewed a commercial in which he was seen saying of his rival: “If a man’s dishonest to obtain a job, he’ll be dishonest on the job. Iowans deserve better.”

He acknowledged the risk to his campaign of allowing Romney’s critical commercials to go unanswered, but said of his own supporters: “If they abandon us now because we are not going negative I would be surprised.”

“If you gain the whole world and lose your soul, what have you profited?” asked the Baptist preacher-politician.

Huckabee is trying to outflank Romney in their race for primacy in Iowa — and in the national polls.

He told reporters one of the reasons he originally intended to launch a negative commercial was because Romney had assailed a third candidate, Sen. John McCain. McCain has made a relatively modest effort in Iowa, and Huckabee could benefit in the campaign’s final few days if he could peel away some Republicans who had been leaning toward the Arizona senator.

Huckabee also suggested a two-way debate in the final two days that would allow Romney and him to share a stage.

Romney had no immediate response to that as he made his final campaign rounds of 2007.

He launched an upbeat new commercial that said it was “time to turn around Washington.”

At the same time, he was freshly critical of Huckabee’s record as governor, saying voters would be put off by his rival’s position on immigration and the pardons he had granted while governor.

Three protesters seeking a commitment from Huckabee to end the Iraq war were arrested during the day after refusing to leave his office. Police said the three were charged with criminal trespass and released.

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Good luck Obama, but I don’t care if even ol’ Scratch wins as a write-in candidate.:| Anyone, and I mean anyone other than “Billary” chosen for the Democratic nomination on behalf of Iowans is a better choice!

People that have failed to do their research little realize that the Clintons have been chosen as nothing but the relief candidates when a Bush isn’t holding office. H.W. Bush made an unholy pact with Bill back in the days when he was governor of Arkansas and the CIA had a need for a U.S. airbase; ie., illegal per their charter. Arkansas was chosen not only for it’s remote, central location in CONUS, but the fact that typically it’s easy to buy-off and control governors from these “cracker states”…! The rest is history with Mena, Arkansas having played a key role in the Iran-Contra debacle under the Reagan/H.W. Bush administration.

Huck has also been chosen as their relief candidate if Billary fails as their Democratic selection; he filling the rethuglican side of the equation. Notice he too, a relative unknown from Arkansas popping up on the national, political radar screen no different than Bill Clinton in the early 90’s…?!

Interesting I should say equation…no?! Get it in your heads folks that in these dangerous times Democrats + Republicans = Republicrats= globalist, corporatist, New World Order controllers; ie., nation-state destroyers. Nation-states and old world boundaries mean nothing to these mattoids. The entire world is their plantation and they are successfully carving up the planet into enterprise zones with former, mighty nation-states simply becoming minor plantations in their greater global scheme.

Elect “Billary” and the people will find out in short order they’ve elected a variant of Bushco, wearing a skirt. By then it will be too late!

Unless “we the people” get it right in 2008, there won’t be much left of the U.S. after another 4-8 years of this planned, corporatist disassembly of America.